Resting land promotes a healthy ecosystem by allowing the flora and fauna to complete an entire annual cycle without any major disturbance. |
|
We regret to animadvert upon the disturbance and disorderly conduct exhibited in the Town Hall of New Rochelle upon Thursday evening, the 16th. |
|
Police are also cracking down on rowdy teenagers who have been causing a disturbance at stations in the area. |
|
When the transmission encounters a disturbance due to interference, the packet will simply be retransmitted on a different channel. |
|
The game is centered on rookie homicide detective Lazarus Jones, who is called out to a disturbance in an abandoned high school with his partner. |
|
Do you make this disturbance on account of the ill usage you received from Mr Kent? |
|
Extraction of gravel in streams and rivers results in sediment-related pollution and a disturbance of natural hydraulic patterns. |
|
In the semi-arid context, dunes can revegetate quite naturally and quickly once the initial disturbance has been removed. |
|
It was too much of a coincidence for both an electronic disturbance and a triggered bomb to go off simultaneously. |
|
In 1791 the main periodical in Lima denounced the cafe as a factious institution, likely to promote social disturbance. |
|
These peacock worms disappear down their tubes at lightning speed at the slightest disturbance. |
|
The peacocks cause considerable disturbance with their raucous cries, which usually begin at around 4am. |
|
Therefore, disturbance continues to be a valid explanation for increased clonality in this long-lived woody species. |
|
Some of these devices may have features that offer more resistance to test interference or disturbance than other passive devices. |
|
At one point, a tiny disturbance was noted on the far horizon, and the group began to panic, thinking that an enemy force was hunting them down. |
|
He spent some time in America and there he began to show signs of paranoia and other aspects of mental disturbance. |
|
Gross chromosomal disturbance would certainly seem likely to cause either cell death or conversion to a cancerous state. |
|
The eutrophication causes ecological disturbance of water, which leads to death of fish, shrimp, swan mussel and other species. |
|
Subjective complaints do not always accurately reflect the chemosensory disturbance experienced by a patient. |
|
This problem is acute in Nevada, where the cycle of fire disturbance has spurred the invasive cheat grass to alter range and wildlife habitats. |
|
|
This simple step protects hair extensions from the disturbance caused by suds, water and excessive handling, keeping your braids neater, longer. |
|
Chromium dosage at quite high levels in animal studies showed no disturbance in liver and kidney function or tissue histology. |
|
The couple were quickly alerted to the disturbance by the high-tech security system around their home. |
|
Students were also required to have a special style of haircut, apparently so that they could be easily recognized in any civil disturbance. |
|
We also have laws and ordinances defining sanitation standards and others prohibiting disturbance of the public peace. |
|
With the roof open, wind disturbance is reasonable and much reduced when the fabric windbreak is put in place between the seat headrests. |
|
As development expands from onshore to offshore sites, potential for oil spills and disturbance in the marine environment will increase. |
|
After hatch, nests were checked irregularly after feeding observations to minimize disturbance. |
|
Some patients may manifest oculomotor disturbance when the orbit and optic nerve are compressed. |
|
But all in all, what with the weather and a degree of jadedness occasioned by a bit of sleep disturbance, it's not been a thrilling day. |
|
The communal disturbance continued for a couple of weeks before petering out. |
|
The illness was characterised by gait disturbance, a relapsing and remitting course, nystagmus, and status epilepticus. |
|
Since January 1998 firefighters in Northern Ireland have dealt with 1,749 civil disturbance call-outs. |
|
Supposedly, a standing wave could be set up between the mirrors, which a disturbance would alter. |
|
First, he says, find an atom whose electronic and nuclear spins are particularly resistant to disturbance. |
|
I believe that the palmered body hackle causes a disturbance in the water and this is an attraction itself. |
|
The applicants were involved in a protest which had led to a violent disturbance. |
|
In all, 78 cases had been resolved with the majority involving vice, child prostitution, theft and public disturbance. |
|
The independent responses of vernal and summer herb communities to topography or disturbance are rarely considered. |
|
He acknowledged that the aircraft were noisy and that every effort would be made to minimise noise disturbance. |
|
|
But those against the airport say it will create nothing but noise pollution, sleep disturbance and health issues. |
|
Although abundant in their favored habitats, island night lizards are still sensitive to disturbance. |
|
Pain and numbness in the soles of the feet is a common presentation of sensory disturbance. |
|
When possible, grasslands found to be used by upland sandpipers should be managed to avoid disturbance during the nesting season. |
|
Loud snoring is not only a terrible night-time disturbance for roommates, it can also be a potentially harmful disease for snorers themselves. |
|
He was then charged with using illegal narcotics and causing a disturbance. |
|
Many people, including the educated, are unmindful of or oblivious to the disturbance they cause to others while speaking over their cellphones. |
|
But thanks to double bogies front and back, wide tracks, and a mighty handy boom, ground disturbance is kept to a minimum. |
|
Congregating stems beside centralized skid roads minimizes disturbance to the ground and it minimizes the need for numerous skid roads. |
|
With the more amorphously defined 'public order' offences, criteria of what constitutes a disturbance are situationally variable. |
|
An inner ear disturbance, such as motion sickness, also can make you queasy. |
|
Other typical symptoms include muscle pain and aching on minimal exercise, as well as mood and sleep disturbance. |
|
Two bomb blasts and a bomb threat last week have caused tension and disturbance in the region. |
|
The random inclination of other concentrations of fragmentary specimens is indicative of post mortem disturbance due to bioturbation. |
|
He had pleaded guilty to throwing missiles at police during a disturbance following a football match last June. |
|
Retrospective questionnaire surveys in tourists and business travellers found that sleep disturbance and psychosis were common. |
|
Like many Quebec contractors, machine travel and ground disturbance are driving issues. |
|
Fires were started during the disturbance and one of the accommodation blocks and the administration block were completely gutted. |
|
She felt an irrational anger seize her at this small disturbance in the palace routine. |
|
Beyond a short distance from the source of disturbance, mechanical motions in solids propagate as one of four elastic waves. |
|
|
For an egg bank to maintain its value as a historical record, the sediments should have little or no disturbance. |
|
The wetlands, its seeps and its marshes are jealousy maintained and protected from all disturbance. |
|
Grasses and bamboos, on the other hand, hate disturbance at this time of year, preferring to be worked on in the spring or early summer. |
|
Four Italian football fans were fined by magistrates after a violent disturbance at Stansted Airport. |
|
The flats are now tenanted and noise disturbance is proving to be a real problem. |
|
Food was delivered in a wash bottle to train test subjects to investigate surface disturbance. |
|
The disturbance to proper waterplane shape is the cause of many speed and handling related problems. |
|
If endoscopy shows no obvious abnormality a diagnosis of a primary motility disturbance of the oesophagus such as achalasia should be considered. |
|
Mrs Cook added that horses have acute hearing and can often hear a helicopter, and sense a disturbance in the air, from miles away. |
|
The appearance of flushing of the face is due to disturbance in pressure in the carotid arteries and jugular veins. |
|
Ventricular fibrillation is a life-threatening disturbance in the heart rhythm, which causes the heart to fibrillate in a disordered way. |
|
Both species need large areas of fens and wetlands and are highly intolerant of human disturbance at nest sites. |
|
There had, however, been a disturbance in the gallery and some disturbance in the jury box itself. |
|
If the problem persists it is a good idea to keep a record of the frequency and type of disturbance. |
|
A teenager has died after she was involved in a disturbance with a gang of youths in the Falkirk area. |
|
This caused a significant disturbance in the market and exacerbated a backwardation in the price of tin. |
|
Along with windstorms and fire, beavers were major agents responsible for disturbance in eastern North America. |
|
The 1850 event corresponds with the date of two intense windstorms and was the only disturbance event large enough to recruit white pine. |
|
I am deeply concerned about the disturbance caused within the parish where I have been working. |
|
Cold weather, a lack of food or disturbance can however cause wintering birds to seek new sites. |
|
|
At times the disturbance was so severe as to bring him to the edge of madness. |
|
An event of this kind would create a huge crater, send out shock waves, and create tremendous atmospheric disturbance. |
|
Cases now treated as infanticide often involve extreme emotional disturbance, as do mercy killings, suicide pacts, and cases of duress. |
|
If you sense that suspense, do you still want to live here in all disturbance and all indetermination? |
|
The amount or kind of landscape disturbance appears to be a major factor determining the distribution of three woodland plant associations. |
|
He would watch for the telltale disturbance of phosphorescence in the water which meant the fish were rising on the ebb tide. |
|
The disturbance of membrane permeability was confirmed by electron microscope. |
|
One trait is the stress-related emotional disturbance measured by Goldberg's 30-item General Health Questionnaire. |
|
For the record, my dogs sleep in the house, so there is no night disturbance, and the birds sleep sundown to sunup, so there are no night noises coming from my yard. |
|
The most frivolous disaster which could befall himself would occasion a more real disturbance. |
|
The atmospheric disturbance caused by rapid evaporation from these sudden, heavy rainstorms over a large land mass has a major effect on water supply forecasts in the West. |
|
We are currently experiencing some minor disturbance due to air pockets. |
|
The man was a member of the Los Angeles police force investigating a disturbance at such-and-such and address. |
|
And they are writing a tell-all story or causing some kind of disturbance, be it legal or whatever else to get attention. |
|
Is it simply because the CLA exists in part to kill small creatures and they would like the moors free of disturbance so small birds can nest in peace? |
|
A flying club claims that its plans to replace a grass runway with a hard-surfaced landing strip will reduce noise disturbance to householders in nearby villages. |
|
As a precaution against a possible disturbance, the ferry was escorted by a police boat, its blue lights flashing. |
|
What could cause such a riotous disturbance in the politics of the duchy? |
|
When stretched, the filament becomes aligned with the flow of the soap film and very little disturbance, called streets, was observed at the tail of the thread. |
|
Gravitational solutions were collected at the litter layer level by four sets of nine thin, tensionless lysimeters to limit the disturbance of the forest floor. |
|
|
We now understand that this testifies to the recurring disturbance that these habitats receive from fluctuating water levels, fire, ice scour and storms. |
|
Some raptors, such as bateleurs, are sensitive to disturbance and will leave the nest, even if they are sitting on eggs or have chicks, if disturbed. |
|
How much disturbance is required to show loss of self-control? |
|
But they soon learned the distinctive sound of each engine and found the familiar tones of the passing traffic a comfort rather than a disturbance. |
|
Probable reasons for this disappearance are a change in climate and more importantly, an increase in human disturbance on their breeding haunts of shingle beaches. |
|
In the broadest sense, any kind of sediment disturbance is bioturbation. |
|
A few cells have numerous tiny blebs on the cell membrane and orange nuclei colored with EtBr, which indicates some disturbance of the plasma membrane permeability. |
|
Travel sickness, or motion sickness, is an unpleasant, temporary disturbance of your sense of balance and equilibrium that occurs while travelling by sea, road or air. |
|
However, any alteration in one, two or in all of these may cause unbalance of the organ itself and a significant, noticeable, aesthetic disturbance to the whole face. |
|
Nesting colonies are typically found in mature forests, on islands, or near mudflats, and do best when they are free of human disturbance and have foraging areas close by. |
|
While behaviour disturbance, depression, extreme anxiety, and other psychiatric conditions might become manifest, post traumatic stress is the bogey. |
|
The link between musculoskeletal pain and systemic disturbance is often not made until the infection worsens, causing severe localised pain or refusal to weight bear. |
|
The model is one of repeated disturbance with repeated bouts of intense exercise being undertaken, where the deer will run initially close to its maximum pace. |
|
Patients with tension-type headache do not typically report any visual disturbance, constant generalized pain, fever, stiff neck, recent trauma, or bruxism. |
|
The couple claimed they had suffered relentless noise and disturbance from loud music late at night, shouting and screaming, abusive language and banging on the walls. |
|
The patient is spiritless, indifferent in expression, has dull eyes and a sluggish response, or may even be unconscious or have a mental disturbance. |
|
The dolphins made it to the beach and the capitulators made it into deep water with minimal disturbance to the circadian rhythms of the seafront dwellers. |
|
Rainbow trout was collected in lakes of all sizes, depths, and elevations, ranging from low to high levels of lake disturbance and relatively oligotrophic to eutrophic waters. |
|
The core disturbance involves an acute generalised impairment of cognitive function that affects orientation, attention, memory, and planning and organisational skills. |
|
A major factor determining the magnitude of rolling moments following a disturbance is the vertical distance between the centers of mass and buoyancy. |
|
|
It was this symbiosis between large herbivores and micro-organisms that sustained biological decay as well as adequate disturbance on a periodic basis. |
|
Four men have been arrested following violent clashes with police in a disturbance in Huddersfield during which a council building was damaged by a blazing car. |
|
It may be argued that the degree of disturbance of these areas is a barometer of the success or failure of the policies adopted here for the past five decades. |
|
Common examples of these latter disorders include disturbance of liver cell function by acute hepatitis and obstruction of the bile ducts by impacted gallstones. |
|
This can take place prior to harvest due to disturbance of the canopy by wind or during harvesting as the combine harvester machinery moves through the crop. |
|
It is not clear if patients regard such inconvenience and disturbance as worth while to obtain accurate readings or what patients feel about the alternatives. |
|
High densities of organisms that bind the sediment and modify wave-induced erosion potential can also mitigate wave disturbance effects on other infauna. |
|
In prior studies, we have argued that changes in sediment surface chemistry driven by biotic and physical disturbance affect recruitment decisions of infauna. |
|
These should allow us to focus more on the computational power of the CPU, with less disturbance from chipset issues like AGP or IDE implementation differences. |
|
Wave disturbance was estimated by measuring the fetch for wave height on maps as the width of the river perpendicular to the center of the riverbank site. |
|
Before they are thoroughly matured, moreover, they are apt to be insipid in flavour, and to cause dyspepsia and other forms of intestinal disturbance. |
|
Aircraft noise is a major cause of noise disturbance to residents living near airports. |
|
Boar soil disturbance and foraging have been shown to facilitate invasive plants. |
|
Flood disturbance regimes influence rainbow trout invasion success among five holarctic regions. |
|
These indications can be related to psychological disturbance, which had its source in an enmeshment of narcissistic bonds in the Ruskin family. |
|
Loss of control is central to psychological disturbance associated with binge eating disorder. |
|
However, most areas with significant natural sea bottom disturbance events are in relatively shallow water. |
|
Noise pollution induces hearing loss, high blood pressure, stress, and sleep disturbance. |
|
Ibanez-Alamo and Soler also found nest predation to be lower in Eurasian Blackbirds with higher investigator disturbance. |
|
The main symptoms of intrasellar meningioma are visual field defects, visual disturbance, hypopituitarism, headache, and elevated prolactin. |
|
|
Regional threats include the drainage of wetlands and increasing disturbance in southern Africa. |
|
The main cause is human disturbance, most notably eutrophication, mechanical destruction of habitat, and overfishing. |
|
The disturbance of kastom is what Moore sees as the root cause of the outbreak of violence during the crisis. |
|
The great inconvenience and disturbance that must necessarily grow upon an indistinction of propriety. |
|
Impacts include disturbance to birds, the environment, local cultures and the economy. |
|
Most tern species are declining in numbers due to the loss or disturbance of breeding habitat, pollution and increased predation. |
|
Three species, the Inca, Damara, and river terns, are expected to decline in the future due to habitat loss and disturbance. |
|
It is declining due to egg collection, human disturbance and the loss of coastal wetlands in China. |
|
Within eight hours, James was proclaimed king in London, the news received without protest or disturbance. |
|
A spate, or sudden flood, is a common disturbance in streams and can be an important factor in structuring macroinvertebrate communities. |
|
In the absence of disturbance, a climax vegetation cover develops that prevents the establishment of other species. |
|
Environmentally it will create a 52 kilometre dead zone, the clearing of rare vine thickets and disturbance to natural habitat including bilbies. |
|
Hummers are midges, a limmer is a scoundrel, to be sackless is to be innocent, a scrapple is a fight or disturbance and yedd means to go. |
|
The accusatory words hint of family disturbance, dysfunction and that ugly British tendency to sexualise prematurely our little girls. |
|
They knew someone had tried to clean up the house after a disturbance. |
|
Retama and mesquite become increasingly important on the drier sites and after major disturbance of the climax community. |
|
There is no known cause for IBS but some experts believe that it is brought on by a disturbance of intestinal bacteria or gut microbiota. |
|
Ultimately these consequences translate into human health risk, ecosystem disturbance and aesthetic impact to water resources. |
|
Mining activities by their nature cause a disturbance of the natural environment in and around which the minerals are located. |
|
In dry tallgrass prairie, FQA responded to a disturbance gradient but with less sensitivity than alternative metrics. |
|
|
It has also been shown in a prior report that a laser pointer can cause a focal disturbance of the retinal pigment epithelium. |
|
Time will now be taken to ensure all guidelines are completed to rehouse the bats in a way that causes them minimal disturbance. |
|
For a snow avalanche, this energy comes as a disturbance from outside the system, although such disturbances can be arbitrarily small. |
|
The thought disturbance and anergia symptom clusters corresponded to the 80th and 25th percentiles, respectively. |
|
Their simplest and most effective scheme is to create a disturbance during which they can stuff the ballot box as they tried to last night. |
|
Plainly, automatistic acts are concomitants of mental disturbance of some kind. |
|
Its decline is due to loss of habitat, disturbance, predation by foxes, crows, etc. |
|
The researchers said they think the departure of stem cells is caused by the disturbance of a group of bone-forming cells called osteoblasts. |
|
The effects of disturbance caused by boating on survival and behaviour of Velvet Scoter Melanitta fusca ducklings. |
|
But I would also say in reply that empires cannot be shattered, and new states raised upon their ruins without disturbance. |
|
This suggests that natural disturbance regimes would have differential facilitory impacts on other mutualistic interactions as well. |
|
The disturbance and resulting deaths damaged the previously prosperous tourism industry. |
|
Oxidative stress can reflect a disturbance between the systemic production of reactive oxygen species and antioxidant defenses against radicals. |
|
These wetlands are attractive due to a dominance of open vegetation, large concentrations of prey, and the general absence of human disturbance. |
|
A commission of enquiry was set up to investigate the root causes of the social disturbance. |
|
Those deemed unworthy did not receive new tickets and dropped out of the society without disturbance. |
|
Females watching calving pools will only alert their own young if they detect a disturbance, although the others will take notice and follow. |
|
These include various types of recreation and the associated trampling damage and erosion, disturbance, litter and threats to water quality. |
|
When de Nicuesa arrived at the city's port, a mob appeared, and the ensuing disturbance prevented the governor from disembarking into the city. |
|
But they lived through these times of acute social disturbance, and we did not. |
|
|
In the absence of disturbance from waves, the bog mat may eventually cover entire bays, or even entire small lakes. |
|
Stability of periphyton and macroinvertebrates to disturbance by flash floods in a desert stream. |
|
Critics argue that this has led to the destruction of local culture and disturbance of once quiet sites. |
|
Deaths in a general disturbance are too remote to be caused by all participants. |
|
They respond to the slightest disturbance in surface water, detecting vibrations and small pressure changes as small as a single drop. |
|
When humans come closer than 15 meters of a sea lion, the sea lions' vigilance increases because of the disturbance of humans. |
|
Like Dionysus, who inflamed the maenads, Poseidon also caused certain forms of mental disturbance. |
|
Recovery of maerl beds would be expected to require many years without disturbance. |
|
The sika deer can be active throughout the day, though in areas with heavy human disturbance, they tend to be nocturnal. |
|
Some evidence suggests that invasive species are competitive in their new habitats because they are subject to less pathogen disturbance. |
|
But this has caused serious disturbance to marine habitats such as erosion and pollution in many places along the Mediterranean coasts. |
|
Cannibalism has been suggested to explain the apparent subsequent disturbance, though it is not widely accepted. |
|
Common features of PCOS include menstrual disturbance, hirsutism, acne, alopecia, obesity and infertility. |
|
He analyzes actual DRF records, oscillograms, and numerical relay fault records to demonstrate how to deduce the sequence of events in a disturbance. |
|
Vortigern finds such a youth in Ambrosius, who rebukes the wise men and reveals that the cause of the disturbance is two serpents buried under the ground. |
|
The practice of dhyana aids in maintaining a calm mind, and avoiding disturbance of this calm mind by mindfulness of disturbing thoughts and feelings. |
|
Another cause of disturbance is when an area may be overwhelmed by an invasive introduced species which is not kept under control by natural enemies in its new habitat. |
|
Like other birds that feed on beaches, Sanderlings are threatened by contaminated prey or reduced prey abundance, lingering oil, disturbance and reduced habitat quality. |
|
There was no macroglossia or disturbance of tongue mobility. |
|
This is due to the fact that some parts were more disturbed than others as it was observed that Gastu and Oxbow lakes had more disturbance than the Maram lakes. |
|
|
It takes centuries for a peat bog to recover from disturbance. |
|
And it appears a series symptoms, such as cerebral angiospasm, overstretch, abnormal hemorheology, cerebral pial microcirculation disturbance, low compliance and so on. |
|
The diversity and distribution of riverine hydrophytes is regulated by light availability and other biophysical factors including bed sediment, flow velocity, and disturbance. |
|
The occupancy analysis and zones of disturbance show that the majority of species may be tolerant of logging and wildlife hunting disturbances, such as Sambar deer. |
|
Threats include the drainage of wetlands, persecution and sport hunting, disturbance at the breeding colonies, and contamination by pesticides and heavy metals. |
|
On 24 January 1932, there was a major disturbance at the prison. |
|
The chief threats it faces are from habitat loss and human disturbance but populations have mostly stabilised following increased protection in India and Cambodia. |
|
The disturbance brought out many of the neighbors in their nightclothes. |
|
He regarded the intellectuals as a disturbance to the Law by employing their literature, and thought that knights violate the prohibition of the state by using armed forces. |
|
Resistance, resilience, and patchiness of invertebrate assemblages in native tussock and pasture streams in New Zealand after a hydrological disturbance. |
|
The lack of disturbance allows for the development of lacustrine varves. |
|
As in Arab waters, where salt has punched to the surface, the diapirs produce small islands and the salt pillars have caused minimal disturbance to the over-lying strata. |
|
Their populations have fallen through habitat destruction, disturbance and environmental pollution, and three species are of conservation concern. |
|
The 40-year-old was heavily drunk when he caused disturbance during the flight, which put its safety at risk and made trouble with an air hostess. |
|
More severe disease with meningoencephalitic involvement may result in stiff neck, alteration in consciousness, gait disturbance, and other focal neurologic deficits. |
|
Flying across different time zones causes interruption of the sleep-wake cycle, leading to fatigue and other symptoms caused by disturbance of normal body rhythms. |
|
That guy causes a lot of trouble, you know, he's such a disturbance. |
|
Artificial water holes or modified natural tinajas used by wildlife are potential sources of disturbance that may affect the surrounding communities of grass. |
|
Samples taken of the superficial sediment revealed that its physical and chemical properties had not shown any recovery since the disturbance made 26 years earlier. |
|
Due to the extent of ground disturbance in warfare during World War I, corn poppies bloomed in between the trench lines and no man's lands on the Western front. |
|
|
Drosophyllum lusitanicum grows where there is little water, but it is even more extreme in its requirement for bright light and low disturbance than most other carnivores. |
|
Another boat, with an outboard motor, drove back and forwards just behind the scare line to add to the disturbance and to pass instructions between boats. |
|
They are regarded as pioneer species, rapidly colonising open ground especially in secondary successional sequences following a disturbance or fire. |
|
Other causes of death are cats, rats, collisions with vehicles and windows, and human disturbance of nesting birds, including riverbank works with heavy machinery. |
|
The cause of the riots is generally attributed to the food, not generally but just on specific days when it was suspected it had been tampered with prior to the disturbance. |
|
The Arctic is particularly susceptible to the abrasion of groundcover and to the disturbance of the rare breeding grounds of the animals that are characteristic to the region. |
|
Radiography of the neck of a patient presenting in this way should be done gently and portably, with as little disturbance to the patient as possible. |
|